| Literature DB >> 32186210 |
Kaitlin P McCreery1, Sarah Calve1,2, Corey P Neu1.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is typically managed in late stages by replacement of the articular cartilage surface with a prosthesis as an effective, though undesirable outcome. As an alternative, hydrogel implants or growth factor treatments are currently of great interest in the tissue engineering community, and scaffold materials are often designed to emulate the mechanical and chemical composition of mature extracellular matrix (ECM) tissue. However, scaffolds frequently fail to capture the structure and organization of cartilage. Additionally, many current scaffold designs do not mimic processes by which structurally sound cartilage is formed during musculoskeletal development. The objective of this review is to highlight methods that investigate cartilage ontogenesis with native and model systems in the context of regenerative medicine. Specific emphasis is placed on the use of cartilage explant cultures that provide a physiologically relevant microenvironment to study tissue assembly and development. Ex vivo cartilage has proven to be a cost-effective and accessible model system that allows researchers to control the culture conditions and stimuli and perform proteomics and imaging studies that are not easily possible using in vivo experiments, while preserving native cell-matrix interactions. We anticipate our review will promote a developmental biology approach using explanted tissues to guide cartilage tissue engineering and inform new treatment methods for OA and joint damage.Entities:
Keywords: Musculoskeletal explant models; atomic force microscopy; biomechanics; mechanobiology; osteoarthritis and degeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32186210 PMCID: PMC7190409 DOI: 10.1080/03008207.2019.1698556
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Connect Tissue Res ISSN: 0300-8207 Impact factor: 3.417